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Journal Article

Citation

Lamm AG, Goldstein R, Giacino JT, Niewczyk P, Schneider JC, Zafonte RD. J. Neurotrauma 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States ; rzafonte@mgh.harvard.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Mary Ann Liebert Publishers)

DOI

10.1089/neu.2018.6014

PMID

30887892

Abstract

Initial studies examining patient demographics and outcomes in traumatic brain injury (TBI) suggest a trend toward increasing patient age, and decreasing rehabilitation length of stay, but such studies have not been repeated since the passage of healthcare reform legislation, most notably the Affordable Care Act. This study utilized the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation® (UDSMR®) for patients admitted to medical rehabilitation facilities after sustaining a traumatic brain injury from 1/1/2002 through 12/31/2016. Trends for demographic and medical data were evaluated. In total, 233,843 patients from 1,290 facilities were included; mean patient age increased from 54.1 to 64.8 years, rehabilitation length of stay decreased from 19 to 14.5 days, and mean admission FIM® decreased from 56.9 to 54.5. Sex and racial distribution remained relatively stable across all years, as did discharge FIM®. There was an increase in Medicare patients from 40.7 to 62.1%, a concomitant decrease in commercially-insured patients from 29.2 to 15.4%, and a decrease in unreimbursed patients, from 7.2 to 2.6% over the course of the study. Based on these data, medical rehabilitation facilities appear to be admitting an older TBI patient population that is less functional on admission and discharging them after shorter rehabilitation lengths of stay. Similar discharge functional status despite shorter rehabilitation lengths of stay and an older population may suggest a change in the typical mechanism of injury. Many current TBI patients would fail to meet inclusion criteria for post-acute clinical trials in traumatic brain injury due to their age, and treatments based on such trials may not be generalizable, which has significant implications on both research and clinical care realms within brain injury rehabilitation.


Language: en

Keywords

ADULT BRAIN INJURY; GERIATRIC BRAIN INJURY; OUTCOME MEASURES; REHABILITATION; TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY

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